Retiring in Czechia: the visa situation
As of our last check, Czechia does not offer a dedicated retirement or passive-income visa. Retirees who settle there typically use other residence routes, so plan on more paperwork than in countries with a purpose-built visa.
Proof of funds can be shown via bank statements, an international payment card, or documents confirming costs are covered; a normative housing cost is also assessed.
Verified against ipc.gov.cz, last checked 2026-07-03.
The verified fields
No dedicated retirement or pensioner permit exists; long-term residence permits are issued only for specific purposes (family, study, employment, business, research, health, investment, etc.), so non-EU retirees use a general long-term residence route.
No verified data yet
There is no monthly pension-income threshold; applicants must instead prove funds equal to 15x the subsistence minimum for the first month plus 2x per further month. For a single individual the subsistence minimum is 4,860 CZK/month (as of 1 Jan 2023).
Proof of funds can be shown via bank statements, an international payment card, or documents confirming costs are covered; a normative housing cost is also assessed.
Before you act on this
Visa rules, income thresholds and processing practice change, sometimes with little notice. This page reflects what we could verify on the dates shown, nothing more. Always confirm the current requirements with the official immigration authority or a licensed immigration adviser before making plans, and treat the linked source as the authority, not us.
See how Czechia scores overall
The visa is one of six axes. RetireScore 63/100, ranked 34 of 40 countries on the default weights.